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Mountains above Salento in Valle de Cocora. |
From Medellin we took a WiFi equipped Mercedes Sprinter bus
through the windy mountain roads to Manizales. We were stopped by construction
for more than an hour so, the driver tried to make up time by driving extra
fast. A poor women sitting behind us had motion sickness and barfed into a bag.
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Sign in our Manizales bus "In case of seasickness ask for a bag". |
We arrived at the bus station which is sparkly new and served by a cable car to
downtown. Our accommodation was is in Zona Rosa. We took a taxi there and one
particular hill was so incredibly steep the tires slipped and screeched. We
stayed at Mountain House Hostel which is a big modern house in a middle class
neighborhood where some architect had fun with multiple split levels. We needed
cash so we went to Cable Plaza Mall. We refreshed on frozen yogurt at Smooth
Berry then changed money at Western Union. We chit-chatted with the two tellers.
They asked us to pick a number. The loser was to work Sunday. The woman got
Sunday off and the poor man had to work.
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Arepa (corn meal flat bread stuffed with cheese) stand in the main square of Manizales. |
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Campaigning in Manizales. Guys on stilts pull a banner across the road at a stop light. Vote for Galan! |
We walked to downtown which is set on a steep mountain ridge
line. We went along a pedestrian street and had a coffee in the plaza and after
visiting a huge cathedral we were looking for a place to have a beer. We found
nowhere that was very nice but settled on Café Portugal. It was the liveliest
we saw and probably not the most reputable place. There was a bar in the front
and a busy and bright pool hall in the back. The music blasted. There were
party girls mixing in with the male crowd and people were singing and
occasionally dancing to a song. A lot of bottles of rum and Aguardente (anis
liquor) went across the bar along with copious amounts of Costena beer. A guy
our age sat next to us and struck up a conversation. Jose had a son in Toronto.
He had the bartender play some songs for Sheri, but the crowd wanted the Colombian
music they love like Jhon Costeno’s “
De Bar En Bar”. At $1 per beer we didn’t
run the bill up much.
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Ruben demonstrating coffee bean roasting at Hacienda Venecia. |
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First quality Colombian coffee beans ready for export. |
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Trudging through coffee plants at Hacienda Venecia. |
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Ruben at Hacienda Venecia |
We went on an organized trip to a coffee farm called
Veneica. The finca is 600 acres on steep hills 20 minutes from Manizales in
the prime coffee growing area (Zona Cafeteria). The combination of multiple
rainy seasons per year, steep slopes, and predominately cloudy weather between
2000 – 3000 meters makes for prime coffee production. Ruben our guide knew all
there is to know about Colombian coffee. Apparently the beans on the Arabica
coffee plants in this area are continuously ripening and, although there is one
main picking time, each plant may be picked 18 times in a year. There is a real
emphasis on quality and the beans are separated and resorted to make sure the
best beans are the best. The best part for Curtis was he was able to drink nonstop
espressos. After our tour we had a swim in the pool and a hearty Colombian
lunch (juice, bowl of beans, rice, plantain, sausage, and avocado slice).
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Pool at Hacienda Venecia. |
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Hanging around at the coffee farm. |
Moving on, we bused from Manizales to Santa Rosa, then caught
a cab to some hot springs (Termales de Santa Rosa). We asked the friendly
driver which restaurant had the best specialty food of the region, Chorizos Santarosanos.
He stopped at a place along the road and said this was the best place for Santarosanos.
It had a crowd eating chorizo and mixed parrilla barbeque where they brought
the grill to the table. We had the Santarosano - chorizo, arepa, dollop of
salad and half a lime. We sat downwind from a grill piled with smoking chorizo
and meat. Our friendly driver had lunch too and we were on our way.
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Flyer for Colombians to spend the day at Santa Rosa Hot Springs. Bus, breakfast, lunch, guide, and medical assistance. Adults $39.50, children $34.50. A big weekend for Colombians. |
We arrived at our accommodation, JC’s Cabanas, just down the
road from the hot springs. It is a part wooden, part masonry, semi hillbilly
shanty next to a river. After Sheri wrangled with the manager and a rain storm,
we settled in our room. We walked up the road a short ways to the hot springs.
The thermals are four large pools located near the base of a water falls. It
costs about $11 to go in which is not cheap by Colombian standards. The water
is warm, not really hot, the color is green, and it’s not possible to see the
bottom of the pool. There were about 300 people there (pretty full) soaking and
splashing around and in a happy mood. They were serving beers and Aguardente
and piles of grilled meat at pool side, literally at the side of the pool.
There were men’s and women’s changing rooms, but women were freely using the
men’s area. We left at about 7:30 pm, but people were still coming in and most
people stayed till midnight. Our suits and towels were biologically active
until we could get to a laundry and have them washed in hot water and dried in
a hot dryer.
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JC's Cabannas at Termales de Santa Rosa. |
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Termales de Santa Rosa |
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Sheri with a giant philodendron. |
Next day dozens of buses showed up and maybe a thousand
people were at the hot springs. Sort of flesh on flesh. We opted for a walk on
a nature trail and caught a chiva (converted school bus) back to Santa Rosa.
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Huge line waiting to get into the hot springs. |
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German girls taking pictures of the humming birds. |
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Cocora Valley and giant Wax Palms. |
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Sheri heaving up the front of a jeep. They absolutely love jeeps around Salento. There are many restored jeeps in town and they have a competition to drive around the square with the front wheels off the ground. |
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Sheri with a big appetite after lifting the Jeep. |
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An incredible vegetarian restaurant near Salento. The lady was very proud of her restaurant and full of information. She showed us her organic garden in the back. She cooked up some spicy felafels for Curtis. |
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Brunch - a good place to eat in Salento. The waiter had gone to high school in New Jersey. Salento is a fast growing tourist town where Colombia is being rediscovered. |
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A break from Colombian fried food. |
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Adios Colombia. Buen viaje. |